Aston Martin continued it’s centenary celebrations in Germany this weekend with the unveiling of the Aston Martin CC100 Speedster Concept at the Nürburgring. The sleek open-topped concept made its debut by lapping the ‘Ring’s Nordschleife (North Loop) during the ADAC Zurich 24 Hours of Nürburgring race, piloted by Aston Martin CEO Dr. Ulrich Bez. It’s good to be the boss.

To top it all off, sharing the track with the CC100 Speedster Concept was its inspiration and a past winner of the 1000 km race, an Aston Martin 1959 DBR1, driven by none-other than the British racing legend, Sir Stirling Moss. You may notice that the Mercedes-Benz SLR McLare Stirling Moss bares a lot more than a passing resemblance to Aston’s CC100 Speedster Concept.

The centenary Speedster is powered by Aston’s AM11 naturally aspirated 6.0 liter V12 and will make the run from 0 to 62 miles-per-hour in just over four seconds. 0-60 mph is around 4 seconds or maybe a bit under. Top speed is capped at 180 mph. Power is routed to the wheels through a six-speed hydraulically actuated automated sequential manual transmission controlled by steering column-mounted paddle shifters.

Believe it or not, the carbon fiber Aston Martin CC100 Speedster Concept was designed and built by the folks at Aston Martin’s Gaydon headquarters in under six months under the watchful eyes of Special Projects and Motorsport Director David King, Design Director Marek Reichman and Chief Exterior Designer Miles Nurnberger.

I’m not sure how I feel about the no windshield look, but apart from that, this car is beautiful. Although, with a 6.0 liter V12 and a lightweight carbon fiber everything, Aston Martin could have done a bit better in the performance category. Nowadays, 0-62 mph in over four seconds is downright sluggish, especially for an racer-inspired super-concept. But, either way, the Aston Martin CC100 Speedster Concept is not a bad way to turn 100. Feel free to drool over the gallery and peruse the press release below.

Press Release

Aston Martin is celebrating its centenary in world-class style with the debut today (19 May) of the exceptional CC100 Speedster Concept.Created as a stunning celebration of the great British brand’s 100 years of sports car excellence the one-off CC100 looks both to the past and the DBR1 – Aston Martin’s greatest sporting triumph on the track – and to the future with its teasing glimpses of potential future design direction.The 6.0-litre V12-powered concept car today makes its world debut by completing a lap of the famous Nordschleife at Germany’s ADAC Zurich 24 Hours of Nürburgring race. It is lapping the circuit together with the 1000km race-winning 1959 DBR1 with British racing legend Sir Stirling Moss at the wheel. It is the most tangible expression yet of the brand’s year-long 2013 centenary celebrations.Viewed by tens of thousands of lucky spectators in Germany, the radical speedster is being driven today by Aston Martin CEO Dr Ulrich Bez. He said: “CC100 is the epitome of everything that is great about Aston Martin. It represents our fantastic sporting heritage, our exceptional design capability, our superb engineering know-how and, above all, our adventurous spirit!“I have nicknamed it ‘DBR100’ because of its affinity to the great 1959 race-winning cars and, of course, our 100-year anniversary in 2013.“But this car is more, even, than a simple ‘birthday present’ to ourselves: it shows that the soul of Aston Martin – the thing that differentiates us from all the other car makers out there – is as powerful as ever and I very much hope that everyone who catches a glimpse of it at the Nürburgring today enjoys seeing it.”Designed and constructed in fewer than six months at Aston Martin’s global headquarters in Gaydon, working with key supplier Multimatic Inc, under the leadership of Special Projects and Motorsport Director David King, the finished look of the two-seater CC100 is the work of Design Director Marek Reichman working alongside the brand’s Chief Exterior Designer Miles Nurnberger. Miles explained: “The brief was very simple, yet enormously testing: create something that reflects the 100 years of Aston Martin heritage and signals the future of the brand.“The idea of an iconic speedster concept that nods to the Le Mans- and Nürburgring-winning cars of 1959 soon came, and we have had complete freedom to shape this car.”Marek Reichman said: “I’m extremely proud of the entire team at Gaydon for creating this remarkable sports car concept in such a short time.“The need to create a truly fitting tribute to 100 years of the Aston Martin brand has brought out the creativity and talent that makes Aston Martin such an exceptional luxury sports car maker.”Measuring almost four and a half metres nose to tail, and more than two metres wide (including mirrors) the Speedster Concept body is a classic example of the almost infinitely flexible nature of Aston Martin’s trademark Vertical Horizontal engineering philosophy.With a body and interior crafted from carbon fibre, tooled and provided by low volume specialists Multimatic, the CC100 utilises the latest generation AM11 naturally aspirated V12 gasoline engine mated to a six-speed hydraulically actuated automated sequential manual transmission. Controlled via steering column-mounted paddle shifts the lightweight ‘box delivers truly sporting changes perfectly suited to the Speedster’s track-focused nature.The drivetrain will power the CC100 from rest to 62 mph in a little over four seconds, while the top speed is limited to 180 mph.Dr Bez added: “The future of Aston Martin is, very clearly, more exciting now than perhaps at any time in its history and I’m looking forward to seeing the excitement and anticipation that CC100 creates among Aston Martin owners and enthusiasts worldwide.”